The DaVinci Code Ron Howard, to my mind, is a safe director. He does not take a lot of chances. If you look at his track record he has a very varied career. He has been a producer (one of the producers of 24), an actor, as well as a director. I have never been a big fan of his films in general, though I did like Parenthood a lot. I still haven't seen Far and Away yet, and it has a pretty good reputation. On another note I have not read The DaVinci Code so I did not bring a lot of expectations to the table. As a result I cannot speak on what they left in and what they left out.
I think the movie is a getting somewhat of a bad rap. If I was giving the movie stars I would have given it two stars, and maybe sneak in a third star based on Tom Hanks alone. This movie did get their moneys worth out of Tom Hanks and Ian McKellen. I can never think about Ian McKellen without thinking about Richard III. It was kind of odd that the car dealer I bought my Toyota from (before I wrecked it) looked exactly like Ian McKellen. It was a little spooky. I shudder to think what this movie would have been like without Tom Hanks or Ian McKellen.
The movies production values look very good. The movie is a thriller with religious themes as a jumping off point. This movie is not worth starving yourself over in case someone told you otherwise. The movie is a thriller. And as a thriller is works pretty well: this is not a nail biter. The movie brings up a lot of religious questions but doesn't really answer any of them. There is an awful lot of talking throughout the movie, explaining the various groups' motivations, but Ron keeps the screen interesting and keeps things moving. I was never bored. You could have taken this same basic plot idea and applied to a million different situations (as I am sure has been done before). I personally did not find the movie disrespectful to a specific church in anyway or to churches in general. After all it is just a movie, and you have to have a reason for the characters to run around. Otherwise the movie gets a little boring. It would be a very short movie if everyone agreed with one another in the first two minutes of the movie. I was disappointed to see Jean Reno as a crooked policeman. I just seems like he is cast so many times in the same type of movie role. There are a lot of little puzzles and clues in
the movie (very close to the same way I Robot
used clues) but they don't really suck us in like
might happen if we had read the book instead of
seeing the movie. Maybe trouble comes from trying
to serve too many masters, trying to make a book
into a movie, trying to retain the nature of the
book, trying to please fans of the book, and trying
to make a reasonable length movie. I think Dune
suffered from some of these same types of problems.
So, of course, you have to make compromises along
the way. I read and saw Ironweed. I thought
Ironweed was a great book but just a so-so
movie. I am sure that the many fans of The DaVinci
Code will think the same this time out.
You can write James Harper at movielover77061@yahoo.com |